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Working Moms Spend More Time Parenting Than Dads: Study

FRIDAY, Nov. 15, 2013 (HealthDay News) -- Although today's
fathers pitch in with routine child care more than dads did a few
decades ago, a new study finds that mothers are still doing more.
Even when both parents work outside the home.

Researchers looking at middle-class, dual-income households
found that mothers took on the majority of child care-related
tasks, and were still spending more of their free time on child
care than men.

"Both parents may think they should divide child care responsibilities equally, but mothers still feel a special pressure to show they are being the best parent they can be," study co-author, Sarah Schoppe-Sullivan, an associate professor of human sciences at Ohio State University, said in a university news release.

The study, published online in the December issue of the journal
Family Relations, involved 182 couples living in
double-income households. The researchers collected data on the
parents from the third trimester of pregnancy through the first
nine months of parenthood.

The couples kept diaries of both a workday and a non-workday,
recording everything they did in each 24-hour period. The
participants filled out this diary when their child was 3 months
old and again at 9 months old.

The researchers divided parenting duties into four
categories:

Positive engagement: parents played with, talked to or read to
their child

Responsibility: providing indirect care, such as scheduling
check-ups

Accessibility: supervising the child, but no other parenting
activities

Routine care: bathing, feeding and diapering

Both mothers and fathers were highly involved with their
children, the study revealed. On non-workdays, parents spent more
than 2.75 hours of positive engagement with their 9-month-old
babies.

Mothers, however, spent more than twice as much of their
parenting time on routine care than fathers. This was true even
after taking into account time spent breast-feeding and pumping
breast milk.

"Mothers spent more time on the challenging but vital activities like feeding and bathing," Letitia Kotila, study lead author and a doctoral student in human sciences at Ohio State, said in the news release. "The fathers were most involved in positive engagement and accessibility which, while important, may not be as demanding as the routine care. They took on more of a helping role rather than that of the primary caregiver."

Women's greater parenting burden started soon after their baby
was born, the study found. By the time their children were 9 months
old, women spent almost 70 percent of their time on an average
weekday, when they were not working or sleeping, on some type of
child care. Meanwhile, fathers spent 50 percent of their free time
on similar tasks involving their children.

"Although the mothers and fathers had similar work constraints, the mothers still invested significantly more time into parenting," Kotila noted.

The researchers added that parents are likely to keep their
routines and behave the same way with additional children as they
do with their first child. They advised women to be careful not to
do too much and to give themselves a break.

"We have always talked about fathers doing more, but it may be that mothers should do less. They need to relinquish some control," Schoppe-Sullivan said. "Today's dads are likely doing much more child care than fathers of previous generations. But the mothers are also doing more."

Please be aware that this information is provided to supplement the care provided by your physician. It is neither intended nor implied to be a substitute for professional medical advice. CALL YOUR HEALTHCARE PROVIDER IMMEDIATELY IF YOU THINK YOU MAY HAVE A MEDICAL EMERGENCY. Always seek the advice of your physician or other qualified health provider prior to starting any new treatment or with any questions you may have regarding a medical condition.